Adult learning is more than alternative education, self-help, self-study, or training. Self-directed inquiry can free you from the cultural traps of today’s postmodern world. When you think for yourself, you take control of your life. Intellectual ability and critical thinking soon become substitutes for paper credentials. Simply stated aggressive learning is the most practical guide to a passionately rewarding life.

Friday, July 25, 2014

For years, I have vacillated between optimism
and pessimism with regard to the future. More often than not, I've opted for
the former, but now I’m having serious doubts. When I focus on technology, I'm
optimistic. When I switch to politics, I'm not.

At times it seems that for every step
forward we take in technical expertise we take a few backward in our ability to
function politically. We are seniors of science and adolescents at best politically
when it comes to getting along with others. Indeed, our inability to function
politically as adults appears over the long term to be driving us toward
economic disaster.

The Enlightenment led us to believe in Reason,
and we have reasoned our way into a scientific paradigm that mirrors magic. And
yet, all over the world, people still kill one another with persistent
regularity over disputes that in historical context nearly always appear
stupid.

The Enlightenment failed to acknowledge
early on that human beings are, to the core, a tribal species, and although we
are great at reasoning, doing so is not our default setting. We are emotional
creatures to an extreme, especially when it comes to the tribal politics of us
and them.

Primatologist Frans de Waal said something
recently to the effect that he likes dealing with our primate cousins—meaning chimpanzees,
bonobos, and apes—simply because they don't answer questionnaires. In other
words, de Wall is appalled by our human tendency to offer reasons for our
actions that are mere rationalizations that have nothing, whatsoever, to do
with the real reasons for our behavior. More often than not, we are clueless as
to why we do the things we do.

We are inundated from birth with words,
looks, smiles, smirks, raised eyebrows, warnings, edicts, promises, and even
prayers that suggest this is the way things are and so these things you must believe in order to be considered
one of us. Numbering in the millions, these incidents occur day in and day out
throughout our lives.

As we learn our respective languages, we
internalize an amalgamation of metaphors which create the templates that we
perceive as constituting reality. These models can be so powerful and so
forceful that, in many cases, they will shape our political views such that the
only things we will thereafter perceive as having value are those that conform
to our internalized templates.

These metaphorical building blocks are
fundamental to our ability to understand something from a previous sense of
understanding, while laying a foundation as simple as the notion that up is
better than down, warm is better than cold, that time is money, and the
language of war is suitable for an argument.

In this way, we assume a worldview that
seems like commonsense reality instead of the trumped-up cultural rendition
that it truly represents. If we live in a community of bigots, acts of overt
prejudice will be expected of us as a qualification for continuing group
membership and proof of one's loyalty.

We assimilate our beliefs about the
world from our respective social groups, and the process is so subtle that most
of it happens beneath our conscious awareness. Many years ago, having always
been fascinated with the nature of belief, I was struck byone of those epiphanies that light up the sky and forever change
one's outlook. What I realized was the simple notion that my thoughts and
beliefs had been formed just like everyone else's, that the reason I believed
what I did about the world was the same reason all others view the world as
they do, namely because of acculturation. This seems as though it should be a
no-brainer, completely understood at a kindergarten level, but such is not the
case.

One of life's biggest mysteries, in my
view, is why, once people realize the arbitrary nature of how beliefs are
constructed, it doesn't give them pause to examine some of their own hard and
fast assumptions. I don't know whether most people just don't ever come to
question their own sense of reality or whether they do and just prefer the bubble
they already live in instead of trying to get a better idea of what's really
going on in the world. Whatever the reason, it’s getting more and more
dangerous not to make a serious attempt to understand the world and our place
in it.

In every culture, people grow up with
expectations of what the notion of character means in their society, what honorable
behavior is and what it’s not. Most of us aspire to live up to our idealized
sense of how we are expected to act. And yet, psychology and neuroscience clearly
demonstrate that 1) our behavior can be short-circuited simply by changing the
circumstance we encounter, 2) our likely actions are predicable with a fairly
high degree of certainty, and 3) those actions will not be compatible with our
ideals of character and neither will they be what we would have predicted we
would do if we had been asked to guess.

These facts should both disappoint us
and serve as an urgent warning that our education about human behavior is
woefully incomplete. If others can predict our behavior in a given set of
circumstances better than we can, then we might need to reexamine what we mean
by the idea and exercise of freedom.

For Stone Age minds to have the
technological capability of wizards is a recipe for global catastrophe. From
the beginning of our time on the planet, it has been wise for us to be wary of
strangers, but when we acquired this innate sentinel awareness, our tendency to
encounter strangers was rare. Today we are surrounded by people who view the
world with different expectations, and when our views clash ideologically,
we’re pushed ever closer to a state of suspicion and paranoia.

Social media enable people to come
together and thus escape from too much otherness, indulging their overt
tendency to increase cultural bonds through attempts to further alienate
others. All over the country, people are gravitating to neighborhoods of
politically likeminded citizens, and those who can’t make the move physically
do so in cyberspace.

At the same, time there has never been as
much information available to learn what science tells us about human behavior
and how we may overcome our tendency for harmful self-deception. The only thing
we are short of is the will to proceed and a sense of urgency that recognizes
the seriousness of the threats we face if we don't take deliberate stepsto think our way into a more civil
future.

Communism, capitalism, socialism,
humanism, liberalism, and conservatism—what all these ideologies have in common
is that they are isims. And although they do not make the claim specifically,
the implication is that an isim is all one needs; it answers all relevant
questions, like a read-only software program, performing every function and
solving every problem that arises without needing to seek input or advice
elsewhere.

We are drawn to isims because we are
tribalistic and we crave easy answers and the shelter of consensus. For too
many of us, though, isims amount to closed systems, and this is a foolish and very
dangerous strategy because no systems or isims have all of the answers.

Contempt and resentment are like
fire starting tools: the friction they generate is combustible, sparking hatred
and compelling Stone Age minds to apply their technology to the creation of
weapons and the war-like rhetoric that follows suit.

Our history should have made it
clear by now that we have to compensate for our tribalistic nature and override
our penchant for contempt with curiosity, if we are to have any chance of
negotiating differences. A sustainable future depends upon a level of intellectual
maturity beyond the tribalistic ethos of usand them.